Jacek Dukaj

Jacek Dukaj

Jacek Dukaj

Jacek Dukaj
Born (1974-07-30) 30 July 1974
Tarnów, Poland
Occupation writer
Language Polish
Alma mater Jagiellonian University
Genre science-fiction
Notable works Katedra, Czarne oceany, Inne pieśni, Perfekcyjna niedoskonałość, Lód
Notable awards Bronze Medal for Merit to Culture – Gloria Artis
Multiple literary awards

Jacek Dukaj (born 30 July 1974) is a Polish science fiction and fantasy writer. He has received numerous literary prizes including the European Union Prize for Literature and Janusz A. Zajdel Award.

Career

Jacek Dukaj receiving the Janusz A. Zajdel Award in 2001.

Dukaj studied philosophy at the Jagiellonian University. The first science fiction story he read was The Investigation by Stanisław Lem, which inspired him to write his own stories in that genre. He successfully debuted at the age of 16 with a short story Złota Galera (Golden Galley). Winner of the Janusz A. Zajdel Award for 2001 for his novel Czarne oceany (Black Oceans), for 2003 for his novel Inne pieśni (Different Chants), for 2004 for his novel Perfekcyjna niedoskonałość (An Ideal Imperfection), for 2007 for the novel Lód (Ice) and for 2000 for short story Katedra (The Cathedral). A short animated movie by Tomasz Bagiński based on this short story was nominated to Academy Award in 2003.

His short stories have been translated into English, German, Russian, Czech, Slovak, Macedonian, Hungarian, Italian. His first story, "Golden Galley," was translated into English by Wiesiek Powaga and published in The Dedalus Book of Polish Fantasy. Michael Kandel's translation of "The Iron General" has been published in A Polish Book of Monsters and his translation of fragments of "The Cathedral" into English is available online. "The Apocrypha of Lem", a mock-review in Borges' tradition, written as an afterword for reedition of Lem's "A Perfect Vacuum", was published in "Lemistry", translated by Danusia Stok. The Old Axolotl is the first book of Dukaj published in English (in 2015). In 2017, English language rights to Ice were acquired by London-based publisher Head of Zeus. The publication date will be announced once the novel is translated.[1]

Dukaj is known for the complexity of his books, and it is often said that a single short story of Dukaj contains more ideas than many other writers put into their books in their lifetime. Popular themes in his works include the technological singularity, nanotechnology and virtual reality, and thus his books often can be classified as hard science fiction. Among his favorite writers is Australian writer Greg Egan, and Dukaj's books bear some resemblance to Egan's, or to the likes of David Brin's, although his stylistic brio makes him as much a 'literary' as a 'hard science fiction' writer.

Bibliography

Novels

Short story collections

Short stories

Awards

References

  1. "ICE: 1000-page Polish Science Fiction Masterpiece to HoZ". Head of Zeus. Retrieved 20 March 2017.
  2. (in Polish) Gotyk, Stronice Dukaja
  3. "Jacek Dukaj odznaczony medalem „Zasłużony Kulturze – Gloria Artis”" (retrieved March 27, 2017)
  4. ŚLĄKFA; list ow winners (retrieved March 27, 2017)
  5. "Jacek Dukaj laureatem Nagrody Kościelskich" (retrieved March 27, 2017)
  6. "Polska Europejska Nagroda Literacka 2009 dla Jacka Dukaja" (retrieved March 27, 2017)
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